“This project is noteworthy because Parks Canada is using cattle to help manage the park,” said SSGA President Shane Jahnke. “This project demonstrates the important benefits of cattle grazing for the environment.”

Grasslands National Park is playing an active role in implementing recovery and conservation for the Greater Sage-grouse in the East Block of the Park by restoring grazing on a landscape where it was excluded for more than 20 years.

“National parks play an important role in contributing to the recovery of species at risk. By combining our conservation efforts in Grasslands National Park with those of local ranchers, we can influence and expand suitable habitat on a scale that would not be possible by any one party working in isolation,” stated Adriana Bacheschi, Acting Field Unit Superintendent, South Saskatchewan Field Unit.

The project area covers 40,000 acres of public and private land, much of which is considered critical habitat for Greater Sage-grouse, Sprague’s Pipits, and Chestnut-collared Longspurs. Local ranchers will manage grazing on portions of the East Block of GNP and their adjacent private land with a goal of achieving habitat targets for the three species. Habitat targets are set and measured by the South of the Divide Conservation Action Program. Ranchers benefit from the program when they meet the habitat targets through a reduced grazing fee on GNP land, and through a financial incentive from SSGA through the Species at Risk Partnerships on Agriculture Land (SARPAL) program. The project is being undertaken with financial support of Environment and Climate Change Canada through the SARPAL fund.

Because the ranchers undertake conservation management on both Park land and their own lands, the habitat for the species at risk is expanded more than GNP or the ranchers could achieve alone. The project aims to help ranchers implement grazing strategies that maintain habitat for multiple species at risk. “This grass bank project is unique in a couple of respects. This is not your average grazing,” stated the SSGA president, noting that a patchy style of grazing would be utilized for Greater Sage-grouse habitat. Each species at risk will have their own habitat targets and grazing management will be tailored to the objectives of each species.

“Because we are dealing with large remote landscapes and difficult terrain, fencing is not as practical,” Jahnke commented on the management practices. Instead, grazing is managed using the traditional environmentally-friendly practice of riding, as well as salt and/or lick tub placement, topography, and time of use.

Achieving habitat targets through grazing means that ranchers need to change their conventional grazing management to take into account the habitat requirements of species at risk. To ensure that conservation targets are achieved, SSGA provides funding for programming and monitoring to the South of the Divide Conservation Action Program.

“The SSGA is excited to be part of this project,” Jahnke stated. “It provides an opportunity for collaboration between ranchers, Parks, and scientists to help species recover and to actually measure conservation benefits.” This program will bring the local knowledge of effective grazing practices together with applied science and research to reach specific species habitat targets.

By using incentives and working collaboratively, Parks Canada and the Saskatchewan Stock Growers Association hope to develop positive and productive relationships in the communities surrounding Grasslands National Park.

For more information contact:Chad MacPherson, General Manager, SSGA(306) 757-8523ssga@sasktel.net

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